A8 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, December 30, 2020 Only four new COVID-19 cases reported in the last week Statewide, 14,500 vaccines have been administered By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County reported just four COVID-19 cases since last Wednesday, accord- ing to the county’s health department. The county will remain in the lower-risk level, which allows the most activities. As of Dec. 28, the Oregon Health Authority reported that in Grant County’s Region 7, shared with Deschutes, Harney, Klamath, Jefferson, Lake and Wheeler counties, 54 COVID-19 patients are being hospitalized. According to OHA’s report, 12 of those people were in intensive care units while seven were on ven- Eagle file photo Grant County Health Department staff prepare for people to pull up to curbside testing at the fairgrounds. tilators. Four staffed ICU beds are available while 79 non-ICU hospital beds are available. At St. Charles Hospi- tal in Bend, 29 COVID-19 patients are being hospital- ized as of Dec. 28. Eight of the COVID-19 patients are in the ICU, and five are on ventilators. St. Charles reported that, as of Dec. 28, they had administered 1,050 Pfizer-Bi- oNTech vaccines. Statewide, 14,524 vac- cines have been given. In neighboring Baker County, OHA reports that 64 peo- ple have received the vac- cine while Malheur County has vaccinated 95 people as of Monday. On Monday, there were 1,416 new and presumptive cases reported in the state, and nearly 110,000 total pos- itive COVID-19 cases since the beginning of the pan- demic, according to OHA. State health officials reported five deaths Sunday and no deaths on Dec. 26. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Pre- vention, the total number of cases nationwide since Jan. 21 is just over 19 million — up by roughly 145,000 infections. EOMG file photo Gov. Kate Brown announced new rules for opening schools last week. Gov. Brown changes course with re-opening of schools Previous directives optional if schools take safety precautions By Teresa Carson Oregon Capital Bureau Eagle file photo U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, answers questions from Grant County community members during a town hall in 2019 at Prairie City School. Wyden: Stimulus bill funds broadband, assistance for farmers, ranchers Telehealth and unemployment benefits also included By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle Rural Americans will see benefits from the recent stimulus bill. The bill includes broad- band funding and support for low-income families as well as telehealth funding and assistance for farmers and ranchers, U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, said in a conference call with report- ers Dec. 21. Wyden said the the broad- band section of the stim- ulus package includes $7 billion to help fund broad- band internet access. This would also help provide $50 a month to low-income fam- ilies to help pay for inter- net services, which Wyden wrote into the package. “We’ve got a lot of kids trying to learn with less than stellar connectivity,” Wyden said. Wyden said the bill includes a provision, which he wrote with Sen. Chuck Grassley, to provide assis- tance to farmers and ranch- ers. Principally, $13 billion in funding will be provided for agriculture assis- tance, and expenses paid with the paycheck protec- tion program loans will be tax-deductible. “The farmers will be able to buy food and feed and electricity and help ranchers who suffered losses during the pandemic,” Wyden said. “... The ag provisions, I think, are very important.” Wyden said the stimu- lus bill also includes money focused on telehealth. He also said it’s important that people can see a doctor whether it be in person or not. “I think we all know you can’t have rural life with- out rural health care, so it is a quality of life issue, par- ticularly with folks who are elderly,” Wyden said. Wishing you the Peace and Joy of the Christmas Season. Best wishes for 2021 from your friends at Eastern Oregon Realty. The stimulus bill passed on Dec. 20 includes a $600 stimulus check and $300 in enhanced unemployment ben- efits. However, Wyden said what he worked on previously was a package that was twice this size. Wyden said in the spring, he wrote the law that pro- vided four months of extra unemployment insurance, an extra $600 each week, for four months. “In Oregon, you might make $350, $375 on unem- ployment...” Wyden said. “Get the extra $300, that’s $675. Maybe you get the stim- ulus check. It’s pretty hard for a family of four to get by on that.” Gov. Kate Brown abruptly announced new rules for school re-openings Dec. 23, making former directives optional and allowing dis- tricts to open if they follow safety precautions. In a letter to health and education agencies, she said “effective Jan. 1, 2021, Ore- gon’s COVID-19 Health Metrics for Returning to In-Person Instruction will become advisory rather than mandatory. Moving for- ward, the decision to resume in-person instruction must be made locally, district by dis- trict, school by school.” In an effort to tamp down the COVID-19 pandemic, most Oregon schools have been closed since mid-March and students have been learn- ing remotely in their homes. Many parents and students had become increasingly frus- trated with the situation and the calls for reopening schools had become more strident as the months wore on. The situation was com- plicated by resistance from some teachers unions. Some teachers are at high risk for COVID-19 or have high-risk people in their households. Schools had been closed and the parameters for re-opening were complicated and changed several times. They also were more strin- gent in Oregon than most other states. The Dec. 23 announce- ment was made as school districts were out on winter break and most administra- tors were not available for comment. The announcement said the goal of the new policy is “putting more school dis- tricts on track to return stu- dents to in-person instruction especially elementary stu- dents, by Feb. 15.” The Oregon Education Association immediately issued a statement slamming Brown’s announcement. “Today’s decision by Gov. Brown will only result in an increasingly disparate patchwork of return plans throughout the state’s public education system — creat- ing uncertainty in a moment when clarity has never been more crucial,” the association wrote. THE JUNIPER ARTS COUNCIL / GRANT COUNTY CULTURAL COALITION IS SEEKING GRANT PROPOSALS FOR OREGON CULTURAL TRUST GRANT AWARDS The coalition has $7,000 from the Oregon Cultural Trust to distribute in Grant County to organizations for projects relating to culture and / or heritage. Applications are available from Karin Barntish, 131 W. Main Street, John Day, Oregon, or call Kris Beal at (541)932-4892 for more information or an application. Grant applications will be accepted until January 8, 2021 5 P.M. Jerry, Michal, Lindsey, Traci, Deann, and Jo S220860-1 S216735-1